Though the launch saw North Korea successfully blast a satellite into orbit, the United Nations and world powers quickly condemned the action as evidence Pyongyang is continuing to develop an intercontinental ballistic missile capable of striking the US mainland.

The launch came only weeks after North Korea carried the latest in a series of underground nuclear tests.

People in Pyongyang danced and watched fireworks the day after a rocket launch that has been strongly condemned by many countries around the world.Source:AP

“Without getting into a timeline, we’d like to see this move as quickly as possible,” Pentagon spokesman Peter Cook said of a possible THAAD deployment.

“We are beginning the consultations now and in the current days with the South Koreans, and we expect that this will move in an expeditious fashion.”

America’s highly deployable THAAD system fires anti-ballistic missiles into the sky to smash into enemy missiles either inside or outside the Earth’s atmosphere during their final flight phase.

The interceptor missiles carry no warheads, instead relying on kinetic energy to destroy their targets.

While China firmly opposes the deployment of such antimissile hardware so close to its borders, the move to place THAAD in South Korea underscores Washington’s frustrations with Beijing’s failure to take a tougher line with Pyongyang over its nuclear weapons program.

North Koreans gather at the Kim Il Sung Square to celebrate a satellite launch in Pyongyang, North Korea.Source:AP

Cook stressed the missile defence system was in no way meant to pose a threat to China.

“If the THAAD system were deployed to the Korean Peninsula, it would be focused solely on North Korea, contribute to a layered missile defence that would enhance the alliance’s existing missile defence capabilities against potential North Korean missile threats,” he said.

“This is a defensive system put in place. We don’t believe it should pose any kind of concern to the Chinese.”

A US defence official told AFP the antimissile system could be deployed within one to two weeks of a deployment order.

“Once ... decisions are made, that (time frame) is possible,” the official said, speaking on condition of anonymity.

The THAAD system, in service since 2008, includes truck-mounted launchers, radars, interceptor missiles and global communications links.

Five THAAD batteries are currently operational, according to the Pentagon’s Missile Defense Agency, and two more were ordered in 2014.

One of these is permanently based in Guam, home to a large US military base in the Pacific, to protect against any North Korean missiles.

About 28,500 US troops are stationed in South Korea and the two forces have very close military ties.

Cook said an eventual THAAD deployment would be operated by US forces in South Korea.

“The United States remains fully committed to the security of our allies in the region and we will take all necessary steps to defend ourselves and our allies and respond to North Korean provocations,” he said.